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The impact of the state of the troposphere on the response to stratospheric heating in a simplified GCM
Previous studies have made use of simplified general circulation models (sGCMs) to investigate the atmospheric response to various forcings. In particular, several studies have investigated the tropospheric response to changes in stratospheric temperature. This is potentially relevant for many climate forcings. Here the impact of changing the tropospheric climatology on the modeled response to perturbations in stratospheric temperature is investigated by the introduction of topography into the model and altering the tropospheric jet structure.
The results highlight the need for very long integrations so as to determine accurately the magnitude of response. It is found that introducing topography into the model and thus removing the zonally symmetric nature of the model’s boundary conditions reduces the magnitude of response to stratospheric heating. However, this reduction is of comparable size to the variability in the magnitude of response between different ensemble members of the same 5000-day experiment.
Investigations into the impact of varying tropospheric jet structure reveal a trend with lower-latitude/narrower jets having a much larger magnitude response to stratospheric heating than higher-latitude/wider jets. The jet structures that respond more strongly to stratospheric heating also exhibit longer time scale variability in their control run simulations, consistent with the idea that a feedback between the eddies and the mean flow is both responsible for the persistence of the control run variability and important in producing the tropospheric response to stratospheric temperature perturbations
Star Formation Across the Taffy Bridge: UGC 12914/15
We present BIMA two-field mosaic CO(1-0) images of the Taffy galaxies (UGC
12914/15), which show the distinct taffy-like radio continuum emission bridging
the two spiral disks. Large amounts of molecular gas (1.4 x 10^{10} Msun, using
the standard Galactic CO-to-H conversion applicable to Galactic disk giant
molecular clouds [GMCs]) were clearly detected throughout the taffy bridge
between the two galaxies, which, as in the more extreme case of HI, presumably
results from a head-on collision between the two galaxies. The highest CO
concentration between the two galaxies corresponds to the H_alpha source in the
taffy bridge near the intruder galaxy UGC 12915. This HII region is also
associated with the strongest source of radio continuum in the bridge, and
shows both morphological and kinematic connections to UGC 12915. The overall CO
distribution of the entire system agrees well with that of the radio continuum
emission, particularly in the taffy bridge. This argues for the star formation
origin of a significant portion of the radio continuum emission. Compared to
the HI morphology and kinematics, which are strongly distorted owing to the
high-speed collision, CO better defines the orbital geometry and impact
parameter of the interaction, as well as the disk properties (e.g., rotation,
orientation) of the progenitor galaxies. Based on the 20cm-to-CO ratio maps, we
conclude that the starburst sites are primarily located in UGC 12915 and the
H_alpha source in the bridge and show that the molecular gas in the taffy
bridge is forming into stars with star formation efficiency comparable to that
of the target galaxy UGC 12914 and similar to that in the Galactic disk.Comment: Minor typo/style corrections to match with the published version (AJ,
Nov. issue). A single .ps.gz file of the entire paper can be downloaded from
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/gao/Taffy/all.ps.g
Interferometric thermometry of a single sub-Doppler cooled atom
Efficient self-interference of single-photons emitted by a sideband-cooled
Barium ion is demonstrated. First, the technical tools for performing efficient
coupling to the quadrupolar transition of a single Ba ion are
presented. We show efficient Rabi oscillations of the internal state of the ion
using a highly stabilized 1.76 fiber laser resonant with the
S-D transition. We then show sideband cooling of the ion's
motional modes and use it as a means to enhance the interference contrast of
the ion with its mirror-image to up to 90%. Last, we measure the dependence of
the self-interference contrast on the mean phonon number, thereby demonstrating
the potential of the set-up for single-atom thermometry close to the motional
ground state.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Transverse laser cooling of a thermal atomic beam of dysprosium
A thermal atomic beam of dysprosium (Dy) atoms is cooled using the
transition at 421 nm. The cooling is
done via a standing light wave orthogonal to the atomic beam. Efficient
transverse cooling to the Doppler limit is demonstrated for all observable
isotopes of dysprosium. Branching ratios to metastable states are demonstrated
to be . A scheme for enhancement of the
nonzero-nuclear-spin-isotope cooling, as well as a method for direct
identification of possible trap states, is proposed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures v2: 7 pages, 7 figure
Low temperature relation for the trace of the energy-momentum tensor in QCD with light quarks
It is shown that the temperature derivatives of the anomalous and normal
(quark massive term) contributions to the trace of the energy-momentum tensor
in QCD are equal to each other in the low temperature region. The physical
consequences of this relation are discussed.Comment: RevTeX, 4 pages, no figure
Modeling of time-resolved laser-induced incandescence transients for particle sizing in high-pressure spray combustion environments: a comparative study
In this study experimental single-pulse, time-resolved laser-induced incandescence (TIRE-LII) signal intensity profiles acquired during transient Diesel combustion events at high pressure were processed. Experiments were performed between 0.6 and 7MPa using a high-temperature high-pressure constant volume cell and a heavy-duty Diesel engine, respectively. Three currently available LII sub-model functions were investigated in their performance for extracting ensemble mean soot particle diameters using a least-squares fitting routine, and a "quick-fit” interpolation approach, respectively. In the calculations a particle size distribution as well as the temporal and spatial intensity profile of the heating laser was taken into account. For the poorly characterized sample environments of this work, some deficiencies in these state-of-the-art data evaluation procedures were revealed. Depending on the implemented model function, significant differences in the extracted particle size parameters are apparent. We also observe that the obtained "best-fit” size parameters in the fitting procedure are biased by the choice of their respective "first-guess” initial values. This behavior may be caused by the smooth temporal profile of the LII cooling curve, giving rise to shallow local minima on the multi-parameter least squares residuals, surface sampled during the regression analysis procedure. Knowledge of the gas phase temperature of the probed medium is considered important for obtaining unbiased size parameter information from TIRE-LII measurement
Progressive Star Bursts and High Velocities in the Infrared Luminous, Colliding Galaxy Arp 118
In this paper we demonstrate for the first time the connection between the
spatial and temporal progression of star formation and the changing locations
of the very dense regions in the gas of a massive disk galaxy (NGC 1144) in the
aftermath of its collision with a massive elliptical (NGC 1143). These two
galaxies form the combined object Arp 118, a collisional ring galaxy system.
The results of 3D, time-dependent, numerical simulations of the behavior of the
gas, stars, and dark matter of a disk galaxy and the stars and dark matter in
an elliptical during a collision are compared with multiwavelength observations
of Arp 118. The collision that took place approximately 22 Myr ago generated a
strong, non-linear density wave in the stars and gas in the disk of NGC 1144,
causing the gas to became clumped on a large scale. This wave produced a series
of superstarclusters along arcs and rings that emanate from the central point
of impact in the disk. The locations of these star forming regions match those
of the regions of increased gas density predicted the time sequence of models.
The models also predict the large velocity gradients observed across the disk
of NGC 1144. These are due to the rapid radial outflow of gas coupled to large
azimuthal velocities in the expanding ring, caused by the impact of the massive
intruder.Comment: 12 pages in document, and 8 figures (figures are separate from the
document's file); Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letter
Bottle Fermented Sparkling Wine: Cork or Crown Closures During the Second Fermentation?
Bottle-fermented sparkling wine producers are continuously striving to increase quality and produceniche products. One production tool that could be used is a cork closure instead of a crown cap closureduring the second fermentation and maturation on yeast lees. Anecdotal evidence suggests that thisleads to stylistic differences in the wine. Six pairs of South African bottle-fermented sparkling wines(Méthode Cap Classique), closed by either a cork or crown cap, were investigated. Analyses includedbottle pressure, infrared spectroscopy, phenolic acids, sensory attributes and CO2 kinetics. Generally,there were differences between the cork-closed and crown-capped wines. Cork-closed wines tended tohave lower pressure compared to crown-capped wines, albeit still well within legal requirements. Otherdifferences were evident in the infrared spectral data and in the polyphenol profile of the analysed wines.Levels of gallic, caftaric, caffeic and p-coumaric acids could be used collectively as marker compounds todifferentiate between cork-closed and crown-capped wines. The effect of the cork was also evident in thesensory attributes and CO2 kinetics. Cork-closed wines were judged to have smaller bubbles and a longeraftertaste. It was also shown that the cork-closed wines tended to lose CO2 from the glass slower after beingpoured than their crown-capped counterparts. The data tentatively support the anecdotal evidence thatcork can be used during the second fermentation and maturation on the yeast lees to change the style ofbottle-fermented sparkling wine
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